When Mathers was last seen, the area had about two feet of snow. A winter storm moved through Wednesday and Thursday, leaving another 12-14 inches and covering any trace of Mathers' direction of travel.
Have you ever said something, maybe asked someone a question, only to realize later that it may have sounded a little different than you intended?
That certainly happened to the co-anchors on Channel Nine's Today morning show in Australia.
WNBC News 4 New York anchor-reporter Stacey Bell had a close call.
While covering the snowstorm hitting the East Coast on Monday, she was nearly struck by a drifting car.
A Memphis man who was suspected of dealing drugs was being chased by the police and took shelter in a daycare.
He gained entry last week by telling the employees that he needed to use the bathroom. Since there was children inside, the place went into immediate lockdown and the suspect was eventually apprehended, WHBQ-TV Fox 13 reported.
Fox 13 sent a reporter out to talk to an employee of the da
You might remember a few weeks back when we shared the video of Ripple the dog being thoroughly uninterested in the weather.
King, the dog in this video, must hate the weather, too.
Poor Sarina Fazan.
On Election Day, she was simply trying to do a news report for Tampa Bay's WFTS-TV on the Florida gubernatorial race between Republican Gov. Rick Scott and Democratic challenger Charlie Crist, Florida's former governor.
Meet Fox 17 meteorologist Kelly Smith. She is not a fan of spiders at all.
So, what better way to freak her out than to replace her weather maps with pictures and video of spiders?!
This week seems to be a good week for bad words making it on to live television.
During a commercial break on News 12 in The Bronx, N.Y., two reporters were talking to each other casually about the one reporter's crackly voice and what they're supposed to talk about when they come back from break. However, unbeknownst to them, what they were saying made it on to live television uncensored.
Read
Trying to get on the news is just a natural reaction when you see a TV camera.
When in that situation, nearly everyone on earth will at least jump in the background of the shot, maybe wave or do the obligatory "Hi, Mom!"
This guy stepped it up a bit.